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518 Pages·1995·37.96 MB·English
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THE EARLY AMAZONS RELIGIONS IN THE GRAECO-ROMAN WORLD FORMERLY ETUDES PREUMINAIRES AUX REUGIONS ORIENTALES DANS L'EMPIRE ROMAIN EDITORS R. VAN DEN BROEK H.J.W. DRijVERS H.S. VERSNEL VOLUME 120 THE EARLY AMAZONS Modem and Ancient Perspectives on a Persistent Myth BY JOSINE H. BLOK EJ.BRILL LEIDEN · NEW YORK · KOLN 1995 1his series &ligWns in the Graeco-Roman World presents a forum for studies in the socilll and cultural .fonction qf religWns in the Greek and the Roman world, dealing with pagan religWns both in their own right and in their interaction with and influence on Christiani!J and Judaism during a lmtfoy period qf .fondo.mental change. Special attention will be given to the religious history qf regions and cities which illu strate the practical workings qf these processes. Enquiries regarding the submission qf works for publication in the series 711'9' be directed to Prqfessor H.]. W. Drijvers, Facul~ qf utters, Universi!J qf Groningen, 97 12 EK Groningen, The Netherltmds. The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Com mittee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. Published with financial support from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (N.W.O.). Translated from the Dutch by Peter Mason. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Blok, Josine. The early amazons : modern and ancient perspectives on a persistent myth I by Josine H. Blok p. em. - (Religions in the Graeco-Roman world ; v. 120) Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBN 9004100776 (cloth :acid-free paper) 1. Amazons. I. Tide. II. Series. BL820.A6B5 7 1994 398'.352-dc20 94-36310 CIP Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaumalune Blok, josine H.: The early Amazons : modern and ancient perspectives on a persistent myth I by Josine H. Blok. - Leiden ; New York ; Ko1n : Brill, 1994 (Religions in the Graeco-Roman world; Vol. 120) ISBN 9D--04-10077-6 NE:GT ISSN 0927-7633 ISBN 90 04 10077 6 © CoJryright 1995 by EJ. Brill, I.eidm., The Netherltmds All rights reserved. No part qf this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocofrying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission .from the publisher. Authorization to photocofry items for internal or personal use is granted by EJ. Brill provided that the appropriate fees are paid direct[, to The Cofryright Ckarance Center, 2 2 2 Rosewood Drive, Suite 91 0 Danvers MA 09123, USA. Fees are subject to change. PRINTED IN TiiE NETiiERLANDS CONTENTS Preface ................................................................................................ vii Acknowledgements ............................................................................ xv Translator's note ............................................................................. xvii List of illustrations .......................................................................... xix Introduction ......................................................................................... 1 I. Interpretations of the Amazon myth in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries ..................................... 21 Linguistic archaeology: etymology as the key to the mythical core ............................................................... 21 Historical interpretations: Creuzer and Muller ............. 37 The background: the Amazons and cultural history in the early nineteenth century ......................... 63 Historical interpretations: Kliigmann .............................. 75 Ethnographic interpretations of the Amazon myth, ancient and modern ............................................... 83 From "myth and ritual" to structuralism .................... 104 Greeks and Others ........................................................... 126 II. The Homeric formula ......................................................... 145 Archaic Amazons: the literary record .......................... 145 The epic formula: [Amazones antianeirai] .................. 155 The meanings of [a ntianeirai] ....................................... 169 The formula and the problem of epic chronology ... 185 III. Penthesileia ............................................................................ 195 The words of Thersites ................................................... 195 The creation of Penthesileia .......................................... 210 Penthesileia in the archaeological record .................... 223 The heroic pattern ........................................................... 239 Ares and Thrake .............................................................. 259 Ambiguous Amazons ........................................................ 276 VI CONTENTS IV. Priamos and Bellerophontes ............................................... 289 The historical interpretation ........................................... 289 Priamos ............................................................................... 293 The deeds of Bellerophontes .......................................... 303 The types of Bellerophontes .......................................... 322 Bellerophontes' Amazonomachy ..................................... 333 V. Herakles and the sixth-century development of the Amazon motif ................................................................ 349 The archaic material: methodological considerations .................................................................... 349 The earliest Amazons: problems of interpretation ..... 356 Amazons in the visual material from the sixth century ...................................................................... 379 Amazonomachies ............................................................... 384 The identity of the Amazons ........................................ 394 The world of the Amazons .......................................... .407 Conclusions ...................................................................................... 431 Bibliography .................................................................................... 443 Index ................................................................................................ 461 Plates ................................................................................................ 475 PREFACE The aim of this study is twofold. In the first part I want to show that the Amazons are a myth. To some readers this claim will hardly come as a surprise. The recent interest in the crea tion of alterity and the detailed investigation of how Greek civiliza tion shaped its alternatives in mythical representations have furthered an awareness of the Amazons as an emblem of Otherness in its many guises. Yet for many years, even centuries, the opposite view dominated the assessment of the ancient Amazon tales. This people of female warriors was generally held to have been rooted in reality, as the (once) living alternative to Western practices and values. Even if the explanations attached to the Amazons have been richly divergent in kind and aim, the assumption that they were or at least had been no figment of the imagination determined the discourse on these incredible women. Classical scholarship from the late eighteenth century onwards partook in this idea. Either scholars offered explanations of their own, shaping what they held to be the core of Amazonian re ality out of their professional views on mythical representation; or they abstained from any interpretation, shunning a theme that had been claimed by non-professionals as proof for pro cesses in the socio-cultural history of mankind. In both ways they sustained the basic assumption about the Amazons, either trying to reconcile the irreconcilable or leaving this topic to rest as a skeleton in the closet of classical studies. The embarrass ment resulting from these attitudes may explain why the Amazon myth has suffered a relative neglect by classical scholarship, compared to its profusion throughout Greek civilization. In the process of coming to terms with the scholarly tradition on my subject, I saw that the alleged reality of the Amazons haunted even the most distinguished authors. This appeared to be not only the case in the early scholarship on the Amazons. Indeed, when starting this project in the late 1970s, I found Vlll PREFACE that the theme could still embarrass a professional audience. Discussing the feasible ways to explain some problems in my research, the majority of my colleagues raised suggestions of the reality-kind (matriarchal residues? fertility-rites? initiation?), or made no suggestions at all. So even if in the meantime a shift has been gradually taking place, I think it worthwhile to offer an analysis of the discourse on the Amazons in classical scholar ship. In brief, I want to show what obstacles have prevented professional critics from perceiving the Amazons as mythical in the very sense of the word. Moreover, the relative neglect con cerns the archaic material in particular. The early Amazons probably seemed too close to the recesses of time, where visions of matriarchy or dim contours of foreign peoples resembling an Amazon society might seduce scholars away from the clarity of professional debate. Recendy, the shift towards an interpretation of the Amazons as a mythical people has setded on the classical era, where the framework of alterity can best be revealed. This perspective is highly valuable, as it illuminates the development of ancient Greek Amazonology and its uses in political life. Yet it can shed hardly any light on the shape of the Amazons in early Greek culture, when they entered the stage of heroic myth. My investigation, then, concerns the early Amazons of classical scholarship and some recent views of the development of the Amazon myth. In this way I hope to clear the ground for a new approach to the early Amazons of ancient Greece. After situating the Amazons more firmly in the realm of mythology, the second aim of the present study is to show how the myth developed in archaic Greece. Some questions may seem old ones, since the claim of the first part does not resolve the problem of how this myth may have emerged. Yet this question will be put and answered in a different way, and new questions will steer the analysis of the Amazon myth in another direction. As a myth, it consists of stories, narratives handed down in oral tradition, preserved in writing and in visual repre sentations. The interconnection between both types of expression will be explored, but at the same time each has a dialectic of its own. Words and pictures create meaning in different ways, yet the understanding of the one was most likely informed by familiarity with the other. The narrative aspect is analyzed in the framework of oral PREFACE lX traditions. Recent research in this field has convinced me that the role of the Amazons in myth is the kind of motif operating within pre-existing, large-scale structures of oral story-telling. This approach makes it necessary to make a double move. The basic features of the Amazon motif should be disentangled from the larger structures in which it is incorporated. To catch the bare words which first brought the Amazons to life, as far as the extant sources allow us to do so, appears to be the most reliable way to start. An ensuing confrontation of the motif with its contexts makes it possible to understand both its formal aspects and its meaning. In this way we move from the basic words to larger themes and tales. Homeric epic appears to be the earliest strand of story-telling in which the Amazons can be found. In the context of heroic values the role of the Amazons is as ambiguous as it is reveal ing. Both on the level of words and on the level of narrative structures, the Amazons are shown to embody an othernes~ to the set values of masculinity and femininity in epic-heroic life. As such they could be imbued later on with the meaning of ethnographic alterity. The story of Achilles and Penthesileia draws on the generic Amazon motif and brings its inherent conflicts to the fore. Heroic tales in the tradition of Troy then seem the most likely candidate for the emergence of the Amazon motif. To reach beyond that stratum and pursue an origin behind Homeric epic is impossible. The complicated relationship between the epic and historical reality impedes any solid conclusion about dates and backgrounds. Nevertheless, some ideas about the stage of origin within epic itself and about the impulses leading to the spreading of the motif are offered in the course of my argument. Several observations can be made on the application of a motif. Apparently, the story-tellers wanted to apply it; they might have used a different motif. But they could only use a different motif if the alternative entailed the same message. In other words, formally the Amazon motif operates like all other motifs: as one of the many elements with which a tale is to be constructed. On the level of meaning, however, it has no obvious alternative. The Amazons bring an aspect to the heroic tale that other motifs do not. The (heroic) tale with the (Amazon) motif taken as a whole acquires its meaning from the interaction of its con stitutive elements. The specific quality as female heroes which

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The Early Amazons offers a new understanding of the ancient Amazon myth, situating mythical representations in the realm of cultural history. The first section examines how the Amazons have presented a challenge to views on history, myth and gender in classical mythology from the late eighteenth cen
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